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INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATION TRAINING
NOTES.
SCHOOL
VOL. II. SPRINGFIELD, MASS, MAY, 1893. NO·4·
Pubhshed Monthly durinR the School Year by the Internalional Voun~ Men's Christian Association
Training School, Sprin~field, Ma-s. Subscription pnce Twenty-five Cenls per Annum. Address all
communications to C. F. POWLISON, Editor.
Entered at the post office at Springfield, Mass., as second-class matter March .8, .8<}z.
DWIGHT L. ROGHRS, Advertising Manager.
A VALUABLE feature of our School's training is the broad and practical
conception of Association work secured to the students not only in their
personal visits to various Associations, but in the inspiration brought to them
from such a visit as was made the Montreal Association by Dr. Seerley,
described in another column.
*••
A STUDY of Associational methods alone, however, varied as they are,
and almost infinite in their possibilities of development, would dwarf the
student and clog his resources. Such lectures, therefore, as that by Captain
Lamb of the Salvation Army, tend to broaden the range of vision and deepen
the sympathy with the other great movements of the century for the advance­ment
of Christ's kingdom among men.
•••
WHAT the superintendent of the Physical Department says in this num­ber
indicates that this department is as progressive as ever, and that those
who have gone out from it into active work have not allowed the details of
their everyday life to deter them from pursuing their studies.
•••
WHAT is true of the Physical Department in this respect is also true of
the Secretarial Department. Among the many pleasing things said at the
alumni banquet in Indianapolis. none were more gratifying than the state·
ments that the School had been the means of awakening not only in the
spiritual life, but also in the intellectual life. -.-
THE members of the literary societies are making the most of their
opportunities in this direction during this, their last term of the school year.

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